For the record, and because you're a dishonest piece of work, here's what I said regarding the Dr. V. story:

If you are writing about a con artist (and I'm NOT talking about gender here... Dr. V. was a con artist with a criminal record who swindled people out of money and was no more a doctor than you are), and that con artist has committed crimes both before and after a change in gender, and you are outlining those crimes, then you probably have to explain that the person involved changed genders. Otherwise the reader will have no idea what the hell is going on.

Being trans is not a deception and the Dr. V. story had serious flaws. But I stand by the fact that if you're going to write that story, you have to explain that Dr. V. once committed crimes under this male name and also committed crimes under her new identity. She was a con artist because she was a literal con artist, not because she was trans.

To try to take this in a more positive direction, Fresh Air had the singer from Against Me, Laura Jane Grace, on recently, and it was a really fascinating look at her transition. Terry Gross used what Grace called her "dead name" at one point, because Grace was a known singer before she made her transition, and it was interesting to hear the ensuing discussion about what's okay and not okay when talking about transgender people.

One other interesting thing that Gross didn't ask about... When Grace was talking about other specific transgender people, she used the pronoun "they," which I've been told is incorrect. You're supposed to use their chosen identity (so in Grace's case, "her" or "she"). But Grace didn't. Not sure if that was a choice she's made or if even transgender people can make mistakes when talking about other transgender people.